Dave455
Well-known member
Today I’ve been working on a bathroom, including changing the light fitting.
I needed to work ‘upside down’ and reached for my Snap On Pozidriv.
Now, don’t get me wrong, I love these tools. Good quality blades, durable handles, and perfect for most engineering tasks. But, it just wasn’t working in this instance. The handle was just too cumbersome, hard to spin in the hand, and almost impossible to use one handed and inverted!
I reached for my PB Swiss next, and that was better, but in the end I grabbed a ‘classic’ if not ‘vintage’ British made ‘Electricians Pattern’ Pozidriv. Everything was perfect about this. The handle was slim enough and suitably shaped that you can spin it one handed, and the length was just right so that you can hold it in the palm of your hand and spin with finger and thumb. Even the long blade seemed to make things easier!
Which all makes you think, that there are very good reasons that all these traditional patterns evolved. In many cases those reasons are still valid, and there’s much more to a screwdriver handle than torque transmission!
I’ve said this before, but you can’t have too many screwdrivers!
I’d be interested to see what other electricians pattern drivers folks have. In don’t see as many as I used to, and very few outside the U.K.
Edit - the pics are sideways, but you get the idea!
I needed to work ‘upside down’ and reached for my Snap On Pozidriv.
Now, don’t get me wrong, I love these tools. Good quality blades, durable handles, and perfect for most engineering tasks. But, it just wasn’t working in this instance. The handle was just too cumbersome, hard to spin in the hand, and almost impossible to use one handed and inverted!
I reached for my PB Swiss next, and that was better, but in the end I grabbed a ‘classic’ if not ‘vintage’ British made ‘Electricians Pattern’ Pozidriv. Everything was perfect about this. The handle was slim enough and suitably shaped that you can spin it one handed, and the length was just right so that you can hold it in the palm of your hand and spin with finger and thumb. Even the long blade seemed to make things easier!
Which all makes you think, that there are very good reasons that all these traditional patterns evolved. In many cases those reasons are still valid, and there’s much more to a screwdriver handle than torque transmission!
I’ve said this before, but you can’t have too many screwdrivers!
I’d be interested to see what other electricians pattern drivers folks have. In don’t see as many as I used to, and very few outside the U.K.
Edit - the pics are sideways, but you get the idea!
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